- renamed our internal validation library to "validator" - which is the same as the tool it wraps
- updated the public api so that validator methods are directly exposed
- this will make it a drop-in replacement for validator-js
- in turn, this allows us to pull this out into @tryghost/validator, and use our own wrapper instead of the 3rd party library
- All var declarations are now const or let as per ES6
- All comma-separated lists / chained declarations are now one declaration per line
- This is for clarity/readability but also made running the var-to-const/let switch smoother
- ESLint rules updated to match
How this was done:
- npm install -g jscodeshift
- git clone https://github.com/cpojer/js-codemod.git
- git clone git@github.com:TryGhost/Ghost.git shallow-ghost
- cd shallow-ghost
- jscodeshift -t ../js-codemod/transforms/unchain-variables.js . -v=2
- jscodeshift -t ../js-codemod/transforms/no-vars.js . -v=2
- yarn
- yarn test
- yarn lint / fix various lint errors (almost all indent) by opening files and saving in vscode
- grunt test-regression
- sorted!
no-issue
Currently the `user-agent` header is the for outgoing webhook calls is the `got` default: `User-Agent: got/8.3.2 (https://github.com/sindresorhus/got)`.
This is pretty unfriendly to the receiver of the webhook who may wish to perform analytics on calling systems, implement security features based on calling system or take action based on different versions of a client.
This PR sets the header to: `User-Agent: Ghost/2.12.0 (https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost)` which is much more descriptive.
refs #9178, refs #8988
With 7353c87d7f we use Bluebird globally for Promises. Therefore, the request lib doesn't need to be wrapped in a bluebird Promise anymore.
This was originally done, so we can work with catch predicated in our image-size lib.
Updated the tests to proof, that the catch predicates work.
The tests fail, as soon as the Promise overwrite is commented out.